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Money well spent: Dimitar Berbatov's first Manchester United hat-trick helped down Liverpool

Sir Alex Ferguson was indebted to the ‘genius’ of Dimitar Berbatov after the Bulgarian’s brilliant hat-trick floored Liverpoolat Old Trafford.

Every single member of the Manchester Unitedside had need to thank Berbatov at the end after they had tossed away a two-goal advantage against Merseyside opposition for the second weekend running, only for the £30.5m man to net the winner six minutes from time.

In some very perceptive programme notes, Ferguson suggested to lose a winning position once was bad luck, twice is downright careless.

Now Liverpool can be added to Fulham and Everton as teams United have thrown winning positions away against this season.

False dawn: Gerrard's celebrations would prove to be short lived

They were only spared the sight of Ferguson’s fury stripping paint off the home dressing room because of Berbatov, whose header denied Liverpool, who had levelled through Steven Gerrard’s double.

Heads above the rest: Berbatov rises above Carragher to head his third of the game

The other part of Ferguson’s pre-match missive was the declaration that ‘you must have faith and we are being rewarded this season for our confidence in a player who has a touch of genius about him’.

Genius was an apt word to describe Berbatov’s contribution, in particular the astonishing overhead kick that had put United two ahead midway through the second-half of a slow burner of a game that eventually turned into a classic.

Ferguson is not the only one in these parts who still feel this is the biggest fixture of the Premier League calendar.

Chelsea, Arsenal and even Blackburn may have won the title since Liverpool last did so in 1990. But with their 18 league championships and five European Cups, they remain the most successful English side, even if United have now joined them on the domestic front.

The atmosphere was crackling at kick-off, although the early action failed to match it.

United did create one excellent opportunity, which Nani wasted when he fired wide after Wayne Rooney’s shot had bounced kindly for him after striking Gerrard.

But the game was low on incident until Berbatov broke the deadlock by nodding home Ryan Giggs’ corner at the near-post. TV replays did not show Fernando Torres in a good light.

His performance at Birmingham last week was branded ‘diabolical’ by TV pundit and former Liverpool skipper Jamie Redknapp. Clearly needing a goal, Torres was again struggling to make an impact.

New United captain Nemanja Vidic, who has suffered more than most at the feet of a man who remains one of the world’s best strikers, tidied up one opportunity that had come Torres’ way via a fortunate bounce off World Cup final referee Howard Webb.

The Liverpool forward also trundled a disappointing shot way off target after managing to get a quarter of a yard in front of Vidic as the pair turned on the edge of the area.

All this was forgivable. Just allowing Berbatov, who had already got in front of the former Atletico Madrid star as Giggs strode up to take the corner, just to stoop for it unchallenged, would not have impressed Roy Hodgson very much.

If defensive questions needed to be asked about that, there was nothing more to do than simply admire Berbatov’s brilliance when he doubled his side’s lead just before the hour.

It was almost impossible to believe it took just two touches to get Nani’s right-wing cross into the net.

But it was precisely that. The first to control with his knee. The second to dispatch an overhead kick which left Pepe Reina rooted to the spot as it bounced in off the crossbar. In any normal season, the contest would have been over.

However, there is a fallibility about United just now that clearly refuses to rectify itself no matter how harsh Ferguson’s words.

The rashness with which Jonny Evans lunged in on Torres as the striker checked back inside the box gave lie to the theory United can operate effectively without Rio Ferdinand, overlooked for the captaincy and missing with a virus.

On the second occasion, John O’Shea could count himself mightily relieved Webb did not reach for the red card once he decided the Irishman had dragged Torres to the ground just outside the box. The consequences of Webb’s ruling would be felt in the eventual outcome.

With both situations though, Gerrard found the corner of United’s goal with precision, racing gleefully to the ecstatic visiting fans the second time around to hail a position he could not have expected his team would be in 10 minutes previously.

It looked like United had blown it. Berbatov had other ideas and rose to meet O’Shea cross to give his side victory.